The Audette House

The original commission for the Audette House, located in Castlecrag, Sydney, was for a house in the American Colonial style. Instead the young architect, Peter Muller, delivered a modern Australian home heavily influenced by the philosophies of Frank Lloyd Wright.

Peter Muller has been in private practice designing numerous residential and commercial buildings since 1952. He has been the recipient of numerous scholarships and awards, including the Fulbright Scholarship in 1950 which saw him travel and study in the USA. In 1952 the Audette house was his first design as a qualified architect.

Muller tells of laying out the plans on the bed of his tiny Kings Cross apartment and setting up a model so that Bob Audette and his wife could walk around it ... [he] left them to view the model and plans without undue persuasion. While it was nothing like the original commission of a Colonial house, on Muller's return they agreed to build it, on the condition that it passed the CSIRO's sun orientation tests. It succeeded on all counts.

Karen McCartney, 50/60/70 Iconic Australian Houses: three decades of domestic architecture

Crowds at the entrance to St James Station
On This Day

20 Dec 1926 - Sydney underground railway opened

On 20 December 1926 the first section of underground railway in Sydney began operating

A hall is crowded with people sitting in rows down the centre of the floor and in balconies at either side
On This Day

27 Nov 1889 - Sydney Town Hall opened

On 27 November 1889 the Sydney Town Hall was officially opened. The Town Hall was built on Gadigal land, throughout the 1880s, on the site of an old cemetery using local Sydney sandstone

Candle light tour, Elizabeth Farm
Past event

A Winter's Night at Elizabeth Farm

Join us on a unique, informative, behind-the-scenes insight into life in the Macarthur home, at night-time

70 Alice Street, Rosehill NSW 2142
Saturday 10 August 6pm–8pm
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